A Chicago Queens who once worked with celebrity attorney Michael Avenatti on a lawsuit says that Avenatti did not reveal a multimillion-dollar deciding of that case to him in 2013 — and then shorted him on more than $250,000 of attorneys’ fees that he was owed from the conclusion.
The lawyer, Joseph Power, told CNBC about his own run-in with Avenatti after federal prosecutors accused Avenatti on Monday of have ones hand in the tilling from a client, defrauding a bank and trying to extort sneaker giant Nike for up to $25 million.
Those prosecutors avow that Avenatti defrauded a client in 2017 by claiming that a $1.6 million payment to settle the case he was control for that client was never paid, when in fact Avenatti had taken the money and used it for his own purposes.
Avenatti, a California-based litigator who in the former times year has become famous for lawsuits he filed against President Donald Trump on behalf of porn star Nasty Daniels, predicted Monday night after being released on $300,000 bond, “I will be fully exonerated and punishment will be done.”
Power said it took him months to learn that Avenatti had — without his knowledge — settled a invalid for another client they were jointly representing in 2013.
“Then I had to sue him,” Power told CNBC, to get his full share, or make inaccessible to his full share, of the fee from the settlement.
“I’m probably one of the few people he has actually paid,” quipped Power, who is one of several lawyers who from tangled with Avenatti over money they claim he has kept from them in violation of agreements.
Power mean he “wasn’t surprised” by the criminal charges against Avenatti.
“Michael is a bright guy,” Power said, but “he’s ruthless.”
“He’s much with Trump, only much smarter,” Power said.
Reached for comment, Avenatti told CNBC in a written communiqu, “Mr. Power was paid everything he was due and both parties moved on.”
“It was no big secret that the Grant Thornton case was settled — it was civil knowledge,” Avenatti said, referring to the case in which his and Power’s firm represented headphone manufacturer Koss Corp. against its accountants, Give up Thornton.
“Documents were filed with the court (by Power’s own office I believe) and Koss noted it in their SEC filings,” Avenatti set. “And we worked together on other matters after that fee dispute. Fee disputes among lawyers are not unusual.”
But Power ventured Avenatti’s conduct was unusual for a co-counsel.
Court records show that Avenatti’s firm retained Power’s resolve in 2010 to act as local counsel in a lawsuit filed in Cook County, Illinois. In the suit, Koss accused Grant Thornton of carelessness for failing to detect embezzlement of millions of dollars by a Koss senior executive from 2004 through 2008.
Avenatti had to be in vogue a local counsel because he was not admitted to practice law in Illinois.
Lawyers for Koss were to be paid between 28 percent and 33.3 percent of any hamlet or judgment of the case, depending on when the case was resolved, court papers say. And Avenatti’s firm was to get 80 percent of that contingency fee, while Power’s inelastic was due to receive 20 percent.
A contract between the firms said Power’s team would get another 5 percent if his tight had to “perform significant legal work, arguments, or become lead counsel.”
“We had agreed that if I did more work that he whim pay more,” Power said.
Power said he ended up doing more work than was originally contemplated, exculpating that enhancement, when he had to argue an appeal of a judge’s decision to transfer the case to Wisconsin. Koss won a reversal of a settlement to transfer the case in July 2012.
Avenatti was scheduled to be in Europe for a month with his wife when that appeal pay attention to was scheduled to take place, Power told CNBC.
Power said in court papers that his work on the application added 5 percent to his firm’s original 20 percent cut of any contingency fee due Koss’ lawyers in the company’s suit.
A year after Koss had its suit sent back to Chicago, Avenatti’s firm settled the lawsuit for Koss for $8.5 million — entitling Koss’ counsels to at least 28 percent of that settlement, or $2.38 million.
But Power said that Avenatti “did not say anything for months” hither the case being settled.
“He just didn’t inform me that the case was settled, as you would always do with a co-counsel,” Power asserted. The lawyer said that he would be expected to be told within a day of a case being settled by a co-counsel.
Instead, Power required he learned of the settlement from another lawyer in his own firm, who himself had heard about the case being settled from another roots.
Power said that when he called Avenatti to ask about the settlement, “He said, ‘I’m shocked. I thought you knew nigh it.’ He said, ‘We’ll correct it.'”
But, Power added, “He didn’t correct it.”
“He shorted us,” the lawyer said.
According to court papers, Avenatti’s proprietorship on Oct. 14, 2013 — more than three months after the case settled — sent Power’s firm a check for $338,750. That amount is 14.2 percent of the contingency tariffs for all the lawyers in the case, or almost 6 percent less than what Power’s firm would have been owed if he did not do the accomplishment for the appeal.
And it was more than 10 percent less than what Power claimed he was owed as a result of that reserve work.
Power believes he was owed $595,000 for his work.
Power said he called Avenatti to ask about the shortfall.
“He guessed he’d get back to me, and that sort of thing,” he said. “Time passed, so I called again.”
And again.
“At one point, he acted as if it’s chump substitute, what am I bugging him about,” Power recalled. “And I said to him, ‘If it’s chump change, write the check.'”
Eventually, Power pack in waiting for that check and sued Avenatti in state court in Illinois in April 2014 for the $256,250 that he verbalized his firm had been shortchanged by Avenatti’s firm.
Avenatti soon afterward had the case transferred to federal court in Illinois.
No matter what, there was no significant action in that case thereafter, records show.
But Avenatti ended up paying “the whole amount, or secluded to it,” Power said. Power believes Avenatti may have coughed up the money after speaking to a mutual friend to the dispute.
Power disputed Avenatti’s claim to have worked with Power after the lawsuit.
Power said that although Avenatti has “mustered me up about things” since the lawsuit, “I haven’t worked with him on a case since then.”